The Silver Spoon: Memoir of a Boyhood in Japan

Description

Perhaps the most admired childhood memoir ever written in Japan, The Silver Spoon is a sharp detailing of life at the end of the Meiji period
(1912) through the eyes of a boy as he grows into adolescence. Innocence fades as he slowly becomes aware of himself and others, while scene after
scene richly evokes the tastes, lifestyles, landscapes, objects, and manners of a lost Japan.

"[Naka] simply looked at things with his own eyes, felt things with his own heart." — Chinese essayist and translator Zhou Zuoren

5/5 Stars "Wonderful, easy to read and filled with fascinating information on Japanese life and culture."

—San Francisco Book Review

"An extraordinarily beautiful evocation of the world of childhood, which retains its freshness today."

—Howard H. Hibbett

"Its enduring status as one of Japan’s most-loved accounts of life in Tokyo at the beginning of the 20th century is due not only to Naka’s historical
details, but also because it is a parable for our contemporary sense of isolation."

—The Japan Times

"Hiroaki Sato has done his readers a great service though his elegant translation of one of the great classics of modern Japanese literature, The Silver Spoon of Naka Kansuke. This 'memoir of a boyhood in Japan' has been a much-loved text for Japanese readers since its publication in 1913. For readers
who approach the text in English today, the book can be understood from a number of perspectives: as an intimate account of how a youngster
grew from childhood into self-awareness, as a chronicle of the rapid changes coming to Japanese society opening up to the larger world during
the Meiji period after 1868, and, finally, as a repository of the ways in which traditional Japanese culture shaped and colored the lives of
ordinary Japanese citizens at the time. Complete with copious and useful notes on Naka’s contemporary culture, and with skillful illustrations
by Yano Sumiko, the book is an absorbing glimpse into a now-vanished world and how it shaped the life of an individual writer of enormous talent."

—J. Thomas Rimer, Professor Emeritus of Japanese Literature, Theatre, and Art at the University of Pittsburgh

"The most recent offering by Mr. Sato is a marvelous new translation of the early twentieth century writer Kansuke Naka's iridescently poignant
evocation of recollected childhood, The Silver Spoon (Gin no Saji). Naka's narrative hovers between and among many genres: autobiography,
fairy tale, reminiscence, Bildungsroman and lyrical reverie, possessing a delicacy and vulnerability that enrapture and devastate
the reader in turn. In Sato's nuanced and subtle rendering, we, as readers, re-experience the strange fluidity of a child's tentative apprehension
of the looming world around, that wondrous and unsettling sense of discovery amid the flux."